Can someone help me with this sentence?
"Duang" seems to be an example of onomatopoeia, a word that phonetically imitates a sound. It all seems to have started with Hong Kong action star Jackie Chan, who in 2004 was featured in a shampoo commercial where he said famously defended his sleek, black hair using the rhythmical-sounding "duang".

in the underlined sentence, where he said famously defended his ...
which is the predicate verb, said or defended? is "and" left out? where he said famously and defended his...

Can someone help me with this sentence?
"Duang" seems to be an example of onomatopoeia, a word that phonetically imitates a sound. It all seems to have started with Hong Kong action star Jackie Chan, who in 2004 was featured in a shampoo commercial where he said famously defended his sleek, black hair using the rhythmical-sounding "duang".

in the underlined sentence, where he said famously defended his ...
which is the predicate verb, said or defended? is "and" left out? where he said famously and defended his...

There is something wrong with that sentence. "where he said famously defended" isn't correct. Are you sure it wasn't "where he famously defended..."?

Can someone help me with this sentence?
"Duang" seems to be an example of onomatopoeia, a word that phonetically imitates a sound. It all seems to have started with Hong Kong action star Jackie Chan, who in 2004 was featured in a shampoo commercial where he said famously defended his sleek, black hair using the rhythmical-sounding "duang".

in the underlined sentence, where he said famously defended his ...
which is the predicate verb, said or defended? is "and" left out? where he said famously and defended his...

There is something wrong with that sentence. "where he said famously defended" isn't correct. Are you sure it wasn't "where he famously defended..."?